Bank of Maharashtra cuts down lending rate by 10 bps, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Public Sector Lender, Bank of Maharashtra on Monday announced that it has reduced it’s Repo Linked Lending Rate (RLLR) from 6.90% to 6.80% with effect from 11 October, 2021. The 10 basis point reduction will make housing, car, education, MSMe and other loans cheaper.

“By reduction in RLLR our customers will be immensely benefited with zero processing charges in home loan, car loan and gold loan segments. This is going to add fillip to our customer satisfaction and bring cheers during the festive seasons,” said A S Rajeev , Managing Director, Bank of Maharashtra.

Additionally, the bank has also reduced its Marginal Cost of Funds based Lending Rate (MCLR) by 10 basis points. MCLR for overnight has been reduced to 6.70%, 1 month- 6.80%, 3 months- 7.10% and 6 months tenure to 7.15%. One year MCLR has been reduced by 5 bps to 7.25%.

Ahead of the festive season, the bank had earlier announced a processing fee waiver on home, car and gold loans. Post the new development, the home loan rate have been reduced to 6.8%, car loans to 7.05% and gold loans to 7%.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

PNB cuts repo-linked lending rate by 25 bps to 6.55%

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Punjab National Bank (PNB) on Friday said it has reduced its the repo-linked lending rate (RLLR) by 25 basis points (bps) to 6.55 per cent from 6.80 per cent earlier.

“The repo-linked lending rate (RLLR) has been changed from 6.80 per cent to 6.55 per cent, with effect from September 17, 2021 (Friday),” PNB said in a regulatory filing with the bourses.

This is expected to push retail lending as it comes ahead of the upcoming festival season.

The RLLR, which was introduced in October 2019, is a floating rate-based and is linked to the repo rate of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Over 28% of loans now linked to external benchmarks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The introduction of the external benchmark system for lending and deposit rates has helped in improving the monetary transmission by banks, an RBI article said.

The share of outstanding loans linked to external benchmarks has increased from as low as 2.4 per cent during September 2019 to 28.5 per cent during March 2021, said the article prepared by RBI officials.

“Over the years, the Reserve Bank‘s efforts in improving transmission to deposit and lending rates of banks have started to bear some fruits particularly with the introduction of the external benchmark system,” it said.

The external benchmark system, it added, has incentivised banks to adjust their term as well as saving deposit rates as lending rates undergo frequent adjustments in line with the benchmark rates, to protect their net interest margins thus broadening the scope of transmission across sectors that are not even linked to external benchmarks.

External benchmarks

The RBI had asked banks to link all new floating rate personal or retail loans and floating rate loans to micro and small enterprises (MSEs) to the policy repo rate or 3-month T-bill rate or 6-month T-bill rate or any other benchmark market interest rate published by the Financial Benchmarks India Private Limited (FBIL) from October 1, 2019.

Not just repo: Over 28% of loans now linked to external benchmarks
The adoption of external benchmark-based pricing of loans has strengthened market impulses for a quicker adjustment in deposit rates, the article said. Further, a combination of surplus liquidity conditions amidst weak credit demand conditions has enabled banks to lower their deposit rates.

The lowering of deposit rates has resulted in the decline in the cost of funds for banks, prompting them to reduce their MCLRs (Marginal Cost of Funds based Lending Rate), and in turn their lending rates.

As per the article, the transmission of policy repo rate changes to deposit and lending rates of commercial banks has improved since the introduction of external benchmark-based pricing of loans.

The transmission showed further improvement since March 2020 on account of sizeable policy rate cuts, and persisting surplus liquidity conditions resulting from various system levels as well as targeted measures introduced by the Reserve Bank.

The impact

In response to the cumulative reduction of policy repo rate by 250 basis points (bps), the 1-year median marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR) of banks declined by 155 bps from February 2019 to June 2021.

It further said the pass-through to deposit and lending rates is substantial for foreign banks during the external benchmark lending rate (EBLR) regime.

The public sector banks depend more on retail term deposits and face competition from alternative saving instruments like small savings, which constrains them from lowering deposit rates in sync with the policy repo rate.

Private sector banks have exhibited increased pass-through to lending and deposit rates compared to public sector banks.

“This uneven transmission across bank groups is partly explained by the fact that the share of outstanding loans linked to external benchmark is more for private banks as compared to PSBs,” the article said.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

How yield on deposits is calculated

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Angry bird Bulbul gets some ‘interesting’ gyaan from agony uncle Babaji who revels in rhyme and reason

Bulbul: Businessmen always get what they want. Cheaper loans they asked for – and now they have it, with interest rates at multi-year lows. But in the bargain, savers and depositors like me are getting squeezed – most banks and companies now offer just about 5-7 per cent on fixed deposits. Not fair!

Babaji: Fret not so much, Bul. What goes up comes down and what goes down comes up. So will interest rates. It’s all temporary.

Bulbul: Whatever, Baba. But for now, I am on a hunt – for the best yields to shore up my already modest interest income.

Babaji: Hunt if you must, but don’t fall for illusions. ‘Cos what you see may not be what you get – especially when it comes to yield in this fickle financial field.

Bulbul: Another rhyming riddle and your fate is sealed! See this baton that I wield?

Babaji: Calm down, Bul. Let me make the complex simple, and see your smiling dimple. You see, when it comes to interest and yields, the simple can compound your problems. It gives you an illusion of more, and you could end up feeling sore.

Bulbul: Now, do you really want a gash and a gore?

Babaji: Nope, here’s the crux to the fore. When it comes to advertised yields, what you see is often an exaggerated number meant to entice you, dear depositor. That’s because many companies that accept deposits do not follow the correct definition of yield.

Bulbul: Pray, explain what you say.

Babaji: Yield, as per finance terminology, should ideally be calculated using the formula for compound interest, that is, Amount = Principal*(1 + Rate)^Period. But several deposit-takers calculate yield applying the simple interest equation, that is, Simple interest = (Principal*Period*Rate)/100. Re-arranging the formulae, the Rate in both the equations gives you the annual yield. Turns out, the simple interest formula churns out a much higher yield than the compound interest formula.

Bulbul: Oh my! Tell me why.

Babaji: Sure, let me try. In a cumulative deposit, the interest earned is reinvested and, in turn, earns interest in the subsequent period. These periodic additions to the capital need to be considered while calculating yield. The compound interest formula does that, the simple interest one does not.

Bulbul: Yelp! An example will help.

Babaji: Say, a company offers annual interest rate of 6.7 per cent on its cumulative deposits for a tenure of 5 years; the interest is compounded annually and Rs 5,000 will grow to Rs 6,915 in 5 years. The company advertises that the yield is 7.66 per cent, using the simple interest formula – while actually, the yield is only 6.7 per cent using the compound interest formula. If you get enamoured by the higher advertised yield, you could end up making a wrong choice. Greed often comes with misery, you know.

Bulbul: Enlightened, thanks. But how do I calculate the correct yield without getting into knots with complex formulae?

Babaji: Simple. Invoke the ‘Rate’ function in Microsoft Excel. It can do the job in a jiffy. Before you take the bait, wait and calculate.

Bulbul: That’s Simply Put.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY